![]() You ask? It’s just a mathy way to take a long number and convert it to a short The next letters and numbers before the colon are the book code, optionally oBx-XZ.Īny other sources can be added to this list. g = base 62-encoded Gutenberg book ID, ex.G = raw Project Gutenberg book ID, ex.Uppercase letters refer to raw codesĪnd IDs, and lowercase letters refer to base 62-encoded codes. ![]() Whenever you want to tweet about part of a book, use illustrated format. If youīrowse other tweets marked #JaneAustenPersuasion, you might find commentsĪbout other parts of the book, which may contain spoilers.Įnter Annotags, a concept for a literary annotation hashtag, or annotag. Furthermore, the hashtag isn’t specificĮnough to make it clear which part of the book you’re tweeting about. Hashtag isn’t standardized, so some people might be tweeting under #PersuasionĪnd others under #AustenPersuasion. You could tweet, for instance, “OhĬaptain Wentworth! When will you propose? #JaneAustenPersuasion” but the ![]() ![]() Have you ever wanted to livetweet a book? I often want to. ![]()
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